jagstang Posted December 19, 2024 Share #1 Posted December 19, 2024 Advertisement (gone after registration) I had a ~4 hour photo shoot today and took around 630 photos with my M11-P. The battery went from 95% to 20%, using a 5 minute power saver mode and regular chimping (no EVF, no Wi-Fi/Bluetooth). I know the M11 is supposed to get 700+ shots per full charge, but I’ve seen reports of people getting as many as 1,500, which got me thinking about the manual’s guidance: Quote A new battery only reaches its full capacity after it has been fully charged and – by using it in the camera – depleted 2 to 3 times. This depletion process should be repeated roughly every 25 cycles I’ve avoided letting my battery drain to 0% since I thought it was bad for lithium batteries. Is it necessary to deplete it completely to zero to achieve full capacity? How many shots do you usually get per charge? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Advertisement Posted December 19, 2024 Posted December 19, 2024 Hi jagstang, Take a look here Battery life and capacity. I'm sure you'll find what you were looking for!
jakontil Posted December 19, 2024 Share #2 Posted December 19, 2024 I once intentionally metered how much the battery drain, a half a day shots, like 6 hours, rarely chimping, and no evf i could get that 1500 marks with 60ish % battery left.. but thats earlier firmware.. now i cant be bothered, it just lives Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chuck Albertson Posted December 19, 2024 Share #3 Posted December 19, 2024 The manual is right regarding the initial discharge/recharge cycles for new batts, and it's widely recommended for lithium-ion batts in other devices as well (that I've seen, anyway - phones, iPads). After that, it's not recommended to completely discharge it. As the manual states, though, if you've already put your batt through 25 or so discharge cycles, you might want to try the charge/discharge-to-zero cycle 2 or 3 times to re-condition the batt. Shots per charge really depends on the circumstances. Walking around and shooting with a SL2-S (no radios, little chimping) can deplete the batt in a day and a half and you wind up with 100 exposures. On the other hand, shooting a marathon on a cold winter morning with tracking autofocus, RAW+JPG, etc., I got around 500 exposures and only depleted half of one batt. I just carry a spare or two, and don't worry about it. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
nameBrandon Posted December 19, 2024 Share #4 Posted December 19, 2024 What do you mean by "no EVF".. you've turned the rear screen off? I use the FN button to toggle it off so it's like a M11-D mode. Doing that, I've done several full days of shooting with plenty of battery left, so I've never actually checked how many shots I can take on a full battery. 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jgeenen Posted December 19, 2024 Share #5 Posted December 19, 2024 The camera electronics prevents the battery from being fully discharged. It is save to use up the battery if you are able to recharge afterwards. Storing it discharged might get the battery charge below safe margins. Every action with the camera discharges the battery. The “1500 shot miracle” may be possible when using plenty of continuous shooting, no previews, and very limited waiting times, but under normal conditions 700 to 800 shots seems more than reasonable. I would not worry too much, use the battery down to 5% or so and recharge to follow Leica’s advice. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
justj Posted May 13 Share #6 Posted May 13 Today I took 20 pictures with m11p safari and the battery went from 100 to 90%, at this rate I can barely clock 200 shots. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jakontil Posted May 13 Share #7 Posted May 13 Advertisement (gone after registration) 35 minutes ago, justj said: Today I took 20 pictures with m11p safari and the battery went from 100 to 90%, at this rate I can barely clock 200 shots. New battery would need to used and discharged and back charged before reaching optimum capacity 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
justj Posted May 13 Share #8 Posted May 13 16 minutes ago, jakontil said: New battery would need to used and discharged and back charged before reaching optimum capacity Fingers crossed! Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
elmars Posted May 13 Share #9 Posted May 13 vor 1 Stunde schrieb justj: Today I took 20 pictures with m11p safari and the battery went from 100 to 90%, at this rate I can barely clock 200 shots. Taking photos doesn't require much energy. The M11 needs about 10 to 15 % per hour just to be switched on. That's why the number of photos is almost meaningless if you don't know how long it took to take them. 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
justj Posted May 13 Share #10 Posted May 13 1 hour ago, elmars said: Taking photos doesn't require much energy. The M11 needs about 10 to 15 % per hour just to be switched on. That's why the number of photos is almost meaningless if you don't know how long it took to take them. It's like within 10 minutes. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
elmars Posted May 13 Share #11 Posted May 13 And the camera was on for only ten minutes in total? If so I would ask for a new battery. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
justj Posted May 13 Share #12 Posted May 13 51 minutes ago, elmars said: And the camera was on for only ten minutes in total? If so I would ask for a new battery. Yes, the first 20 photos the battery went down really fast. Now about 90 photos later battery is only 65%. Total camera on time is much less than 1 hour for sure. 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
SrMi Posted May 13 Share #13 Posted May 13 9 hours ago, justj said: Today I took 20 pictures with m11p safari and the battery went from 100 to 90%, at this rate I can barely clock 200 shots. The battery is mainly used when the EVF or LCD is active, not when pressing the shutter. Initially, we tend to use the menus and review images more than later, hence higher battery consumption. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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